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<h2> THE CYNICAL MISS CATHERWAIGHT </h2>
<h2> By Richard Harding Davis </h2>
<p>Miss Catherwaight's collection of orders and decorations and medals was
her chief offence in the eyes of those of her dear friends who thought her
clever but cynical.</p>
<p>All of them were willing to admit that she was clever, but some of them
said she was clever only to be unkind.</p>
<p>Young Van Bibber had said that if Miss Catherwaight did not like dances
and days and teas, she had only to stop going to them instead of making
unpleasant remarks about those who did. So many people repeated this that
young Van Bibber believed finally that he had said something good, and was
somewhat pleased in consequence, as he was not much given to that sort of
thing.</p>
<p>Mrs. Catherwaight, while she was alive, lived solely for society, and, so
some people said, not only lived but died for it. She certainly did go
about a great deal, and she used to carry her husband away from his
library every night of every season and left him standing in the doorways
of drawing-rooms, outwardly courteous and distinguished looking, but
inwardly somnolent and unhappy. She was a born and trained social leader,
and her daughter's coming out was to have been the greatest effort of her
life. She regarded it as an event in the dear child's lifetime second only
in importance to her birth; equally important with her probable marriage
and of much more poignant interest than her possible death. But the great
effort proved too much for the mother, and she died, fondly remembered by
her peers and tenderly referred to by a great many people who could not
even show a card for her Thursdays. Her husband and her daughter were not
going out, of necessity, for more than a year after her death, and then
felt no inclination to begin over again, but lived very much together and
showed themselves only occasionally.</p>
<p>They entertained, though, a great deal, in the way of dinners, and an
invitation to one of these dinners soon became a diploma for intellectual
as well as social qualifications of a very high order.</p>
<p>One was always sure of meeting some one of consideration there, which was
pleasant in itself, and also rendered it easy to let one's friends know
where one had been dining. It sounded so flat to boast abruptly, “I dined
at the Catherwaights' last night”; while it seemed only natural to remark,
“That reminds me of a story that novelist, what's his name, told at Mr.
Catherwaight's,” or “That English chap, who's been in Africa, was at the
Catherwaights' the other night, and told me—”</p>
<p>After one of these dinners people always asked to be allowed to look over
Miss Catherwaight's collection, of which almost everybody had heard. It
consisted of over a hundred medals and decorations which Miss Catherwaight
had purchased while on the long tours she made with her father in all
parts of the world. Each of them had been given as a reward for some
public service, as a recognition of some virtue of the highest order—for
personal bravery, for statesmanship, for great genius in the arts; and
each had been pawned by the recipient or sold outright. Miss Catherwaight
referred to them as her collection of dishonored honors, and called them
variously her Orders of the Knights of the Almighty Dollar, pledges to
patriotism and the pawnshops, and honors at second-hand.</p>
<p>It was her particular fad to get as many of these together as she could
and to know the story of each. The less creditable the story, the more
highly she valued the medal. People might think it was not a pretty hobby
for a young girl, but they could not help smiling at the stories and at
the scorn with which she told them.</p>
<p>“These,” she would say, “are crosses of the Legion of Honor; they are of
the lowest degree, that of chevalier. I keep them in this cigar box to
show how cheaply I got them and how cheaply I hold them. I think you can
get them here in New York for ten dollars; they cost more than that—about
a hundred francs—in Paris. At second-hand, of course. The French
government can imprison you, you know, for ten years, if you wear one
without the right to do so, but they have no punishment for those who
choose to part with them for a mess of pottage.</p>
<p>“All these,” she would run on, “are English war medals. See, on this one
is 'Alma,' 'Balaclava,' and 'Sebastopol.' He was quite a veteran, was he
not? Well, he sold this to a dealer on Wardour Street, London, for five
and six. You can get any number of them on the Bowery for their weight in
silver. I tried very hard to get a Victoria Cross when I was in England,
and I only succeeded in getting this one after a great deal of trouble.
They value the cross so highly, you know, that it is the only other
decoration in the case which holds the Order of the Garter in the Jewel
Room at the Tower. It is made of copper, so that its intrinsic value won't
have any weight with the man who gets it, but I bought this nevertheless
for five pounds. The soldier to whom it belonged had loaded and fired a
cannon all alone when the rest of the men about the battery had run away.
He was captured by the enemy, but retaken immediately afterward by
re-enforcements from his own side, and the general in command recommended
him to the Queen for decoration. He sold his cross to the proprietor of a
curiosity shop and drank himself to death. I felt rather meanly about
keeping it and hunted up his widow to return it to her, but she said I
could have it for a consideration.</p>
<p>“This gold medal was given, as you see, to 'Hiram J. Stillman, of the
sloop <i>Annie Barker</i>, for saving the crew of the steamship <i>Olivia</i>,
June 18, 1888,' by the President of the United States and both houses of
Congress. I found it on Baxter Street in a pawnshop. The gallant Hiram J.
had pawned it for sixteen dollars and never came back to claim it.”</p>
<p>“But, Miss Catherwaight,” some optimist would object, “these men
undoubtedly did do something brave and noble once. You can't get back of
that; and they didn't do it for a medal, either, but because it was their
duty. And so the medal meant nothing to them: their conscience told them
they had done the right thing; they didn't need a stamped coin to remind
them of it, or of their wounds, either, perhaps.”</p>
<p>“Quite right; that's quite true,” Miss Catherwaight would say. “But how
about this? Look at this gold medal with the diamonds: 'Presented to
Colonel James F. Placer by the men of his regiment, in camp before
Richmond.' Every soldier in the regiment gave something toward that, and
yet the brave gentleman put it up at a game of poker one night, and the
officer who won it sold it to the man who gave it to me. Can you defend
that?”</p>
<p>Miss Catherwaight was well known to the proprietors of the pawnshops and
loan offices on the Bowery and Park Row. They learned to look for her once
a month, and saved what medals they received for her and tried to learn
their stories from the people who pawned them, or else invented some story
which they hoped would answer just as well.</p>
<p>Though her brougham produced a sensation in the unfashionable streets into
which she directed it, she was never annoyed. Her maid went with her into
the shops, and one of the grooms always stood at the door within call, to
the intense delight of the neighborhood. And one day she found what, from
her point of view, was a perfect gem. It was a poor, cheap-looking,
tarnished silver medal, a half-dollar once, undoubtedly, beaten out
roughly into the shape of a heart and engraved in script by the jeweller
of some country town. On one side were two clasped hands with a wreath
around them, and on the reverse was this inscription: “From Henry Burgoyne
to his beloved friend Lewis L. Lockwood”; and below, “Through prosperity
and adversity.” That was all. And here it was among razors and pistols and
family Bibles in a pawnbroker's window. What a story there was in that!
These two boy friends, and their boyish friendship that was to withstand
adversity and prosperity, and all that remained of it was this inscription
to its memory like the wording on a tomb!</p>
<p>“He couldn't have got so much on it any way,” said the pawnbroker,
entering into her humor. “I didn't lend him more'n a quarter of a dollar
at the most.”</p>
<p>Miss Catherwaight stood wondering if the Lewis L. Lockwood could be Lewis
Lockwood, the lawyer one read so much about. Then she remembered his
middle name was Lyman, and said quickly, “I'll take it, please.”</p>
<p>She stepped into the carriage, and told the man to go find a directory and
look for Lewis Lyman Lockwood. The groom returned in a few minutes and
said there was such a name down in the book as a lawyer, and that his
office was such a number on Broadway; it must be near Liberty. “Go there,”
said Miss Catherwaight.</p>
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